"I can never forget the delights of Kabul, nor express the depth of my longing to return." Zahiruddin
Mohammed Babar, founder of the Moghul Empire.

It is the journey of an uncertain dream. A journey I have experienced while in Afghanistan. I spent nights
sharing hotel floors with dozens of men.

From across the room, old and young were confined to a sole
purpose, a similar destiny, to find work and to live a life, and perhaps forget years of destructive warfare they survived.

From all over Afghanistan, the desire to go forward is unanimous and perhaps a dream becoming true.
Kabul
has seen unprecedented changes, but men found themselves engaged into hard labor to live in a city that lost its beauty.

The lack of basic resources and constant isolation split thousands of young boys into crucial choices.

Their youth became short, they were among men; they became men.

The image of the young boy changing a tire presents the essence of this matter. And the women were still
conditioned behind a curtain of law.« less